Senate debates

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

Questions without Notice

Automotive Industry

2:09 pm

Photo of Kim CarrKim Carr (Victoria, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research) Share this | Hansard source

I thank the senator for his question. I would trust that all members of this chamber would acknowledge that the Australian automotive industry is at the backbone of Australian manufacturing. I would trust that all members of this chamber would support strengthening the Australian automotive industry in the face of a global economic crisis. I say to the senator: I do not make promises that this government cannot keep. We on this side of the chamber are committed to strengthening the Australian automotive industry to provide security of investment by encouraging a stable, long-term investment climate for the industry. Our package is about attracting new investment and creating new job opportunities. In a climate of great insecurity in the global economic financial system, you should not indulge in irresponsible speculation about the fate of individual companies, as Senator Abetz has been doing, nor should you make irresponsible promises about what can be done about every single job within Australian manufacturing at this time.

Frankly, it is embarrassing to watch a divided opposition trying to figure out where they actually stand on a question of such vital national significance. Do they have a policy on the Australian car industry? No. They have left the industry on automatic pilot for years. That is their policy: automatic pilot. All we have seen so far, Senator Ferguson, is self-serving, self-congratulatory rhetoric from each pretender to the leadership of the Liberal Party who is seeking to establish their 15 minutes of fame. We have the member for North Sydney, who says, ‘I don’t know that it is necessarily the right thing to hand money immediately to the motor vehicle industry in Australia without knowing whether those companies are going to merge or whether they will even exist in 12 months.’ In other words, they are saying, ‘Not now. We don’t want to support this industry now.’

The member for Warringah says, ‘There have been a lot of assistance packages for the car industry, and the real issue for any future package is: just how long is it going to last?’ He says, ‘Will the car industry in this country ever be able to stand on its own two feet?’ In other words, the member for Warringah says, ‘We’ll support them—but not ever.’ That is his real position. Talk about two bob each way. And, of course, we have Senator Abetz, who says: ‘Kim Carr is claiming that $6.2 billion over 13 years is a better package. It isn’t when you have to take into account the number of years it is spread over.’ In other words, Senator Abetz says, ‘It’s not enough.’ So we have three positions from the opposition. We have one that says, ‘We don’t support it now,’ one that says, ‘We don’t support it ever,’ and one that says, ‘It’s not enough’. Those are the three positions that the opposition are presenting. Which is it? Not enough, not now or not ever? What is the position of the Liberal Party? Senator Abetz stood up in this chamber yesterday and said, ‘The coalition’s best friend— (Time expired)

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